State v. Price
State v. Price
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The defendant was indicted for murder, and was tried before his Honor, Judge Memminger, and a'jury, at the June term of Court, 1915, for Marion county, and was found guilty of murder with recommendation to mercy. After verdict was rendered a motion for a new trial and arrest of judgment was made and overruled by the Court and sentence pronounced. Defendant appeals and asks reversal.
The first exception imputes error to the presiding Judge in the exclusion of certain testimony and is as follows: 1. Because his Honor erred, it is respectfully submitted, in refusing to permit the defendant to testify as to communications made to him by his wife immediately before oi shortly before the fatal encounter, and in holding that it was incompetent for the defendant to tell what his wife told *279 him before the killing, in that such testimony was competent as tending to show the attitude of the deceased toward the defendant, and the state of mind of the defendant shortly before the fatal encounter, and the absence of malice, and was so closely connected with the fatal encounter in time and circumstances as to be fairly regarded as a part of the res gestee, and because his Honor also erred, it is respectfully submitted, in overruling defendant’s motion for a new trial, on the same ground. This exception must be sustained.
Judgment reversed. New trial granted,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State v. Price.
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- Syllabus
- Trial. Exclusion or Evidence. Charge. 1. Trial — Appeal and Error — Evidence. — It is reversible error to exclude evidence which in any view of the case might have been competent, without ascertaining its nature or bearing upon the case. 2. Trial — Charge.—A charge upon the facts is inhibited by the Constitution, and may be violated in telling a jury what another jury in another county has done in another case.